anglais > français | |
prune | |
1. n. Pruneau, prune séchée. | |
2. v. Élaguer. | |
A good grape grower will prune his vines once a year. | |
3. v. Égayer (un arbre). | |
anglais > anglais | |
prune | |
1. n. (obsolete) A plum. | |
2. n. The dried, wrinkled fruit of certain species of plum. | |
3. n. (slang) An old woman, especially a wrinkly one. | |
4. v. (transitive, horticulture) To remove excess material from a tree or shrub; to trim, especially to make more healthy or productive. | |
A good grape grower will prune the vines once a year. | |
5. v. (transitive, figuratively) To cut down or shorten (by the removal of unnecessary material). | |
to prune a budget, or an essay | |
6. v. (transitive, computer science) To remove unnecessary branches from a tree data structure. | |
7. v. (obsolete) To preen; to prepare; to dress. | |
8. v. (intransitive, informal) To become wrinkled like a dried plum, as the fingers and toes do when kept submerged in water. | |
français > anglais | |
pruneau | |
1. n-m. prune (dried plum) | |